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IF NOT THE IWCA WHO,
IF NOT THIS WAY HOW, IF NOT NOW WHEN?
12th May '03
One time Labour Executive member Shaid Malik was the first to make a
grab for the ultimate comfort blanket. The BNP success, in becoming the
official opposition in his hometown Burnley in just twelve months, needed
to be seen in context he insisted. There were 22,000
councillors in Britain he cautioned and the BNP had less than
20 of them. For a politician who simply oozes personal vanity and
ambition, the probable attraction in drawing on such a comparison is that
he believes he will never have to eat humble pie, for its usage is almost
infinite. Say one day the BNP top 1000 councillors, there would still
be 21,000 councillors left for Malik to smugly point to.
As it is, Burnley is for now the BNPs only power base, and last
Saturday the Guardian reported that Labour supporters were consoling themselves
by saying that the BNP had been "corralled at the eastern end of
the M65." How Sandwell in the Midlands or Broxbourne in Hertfordshire
is considered to be in that catchment area is anyones guess.
Hardly any more convincing was the response of left-wing MP Chris Mullin
to the BNP showing in his Sunderland constituency. "No one can afford
to be complacent about the BNP but they have not done as well as I feared
they might do". We can only speculate as to what he had envisaged.
But it is perhaps a bit of a giveaway that he described himself "delighted
that out of over 99,000 votes cast across Sunderland, a mere 13,652 of
his constituents had ticked BNP. Mullin is obviously a man who is easily
pleased. But Local Government Minister Nick Raynsford was even more upbeat.
"The BNP thrives in areas of low turnout", he trumpeted, perhaps
unwittingly drawing on stock in trade Searchlight propaganda, for which
there is not a shred of convincing evidence. He goes on; "if you
increase turnout there is a better chance that they wont get through."
Yes, possibly. However as with the IWCA, one of the marked features of
the BNP participation in fighting local elections is that many voters,
who otherwise would not have bothered, actually do so. When for instance
the BNP won a by-election in Halifax in January 2003 the turnout was driven
up from 22% to 37%. An argument in a similar vein is that the electoral
resurgence of the far right owes much to disillusioned Tories and can
thus be disregarded. At best this can only be partially true, as overwhelmingly,
the seats falling to the BNP are Labour ones. And if indeed some Tories
are switching to the BNP, it is more than likely these are that same section
of the Tory party who deserted the NF in 1979 and are merely returning
home. Though widely championed by anti-fascism at the time
as being of crucial importance, the u-turn is being sneered at now. By
and large it is fair to say that the conclusions being drawn about BNP
achievements, much less prospects, are not being reached by a method of
investigation that any fair-minded person could regard as impartial.
Patently the primary motivation of the purveyors of such cant is to try
and protect their fast-fading reputations by divesting themselves of responsibility,
or otherwise washing their hands of the catastrophe now unfolding before
their eyes.
Putting the twisted logic and the inverted and totally phoney triumphalism
aside, an article in this Fridays Guardian rather let the cat out
of the valise in admitting that; "in the capitals of Europe there
are growing fears that asylum has become an issue capable of leading to
electoral collapse of even the most entrenched left social democrat government.
Last weeks limited advances by the British National Party in the local
elections fuelled that anxiety in No 10."
So there we have it. What then the chances of substitute scenarios?
For the conservative left, a reassurance of sorts came with the SSP fulfilling
its promise by taking 5 further seats in the Scottish Parliament. However
a closer study shows that despite the impressive national profile the
SSP have just two councillors. And in Glasgows Strathbungo ward
the SSP were beaten into fourth place by the IWCA (who came within 150
votes of taking the seat) without a single one of the IWCA team responsible
ever having contested an election before.
So for the SSP there are a number of lessons to be drawn. One, the party
appears to have talent at the very top but is burdened with predictably
variable quality at the bottom. Secondly, the system of proportional representation
may owe rather more to the breakthrough than the SSP might like to politically
consider, for unpalatable as it is, it can be the only explanation for
how the SSP emerged from the election with more than three times as many
elected MSPs as it has SSP councillors.
In England the Socialist Alliance which campaigned entirely on a stop
the war ticket, even though it was apparent to most sane people
that the war such as it was, was long over, did as dismally (considerably
less than 5% on average) as everyone including their own supporters suspected
they would. In one ward in Preston the SA candidate did emerge victorious,
which left everyone baffled until it emerged that the surge in support
was a result of the intervention of the local Imam who publicly called
for the Muslim congregation to vote against Labour as a pro-war
party.
Considering that Weekly Worker, the Socialist Alliances biggest
cheerleader, had just prior to the election declared the continued existence
of the SA as only slightly better than total liquidation,
this means that had the Preston result truly reflected socialist sentiment
(rather than the anti-Labour ethnic/nationalist backlash it was) the SA
could not even then (considering the many hundreds of wretched results
in its brief existence) have regarded it with any satisfaction. For in
their heart of hearts, all would surely know an exception to the rule
at this stage, carries no more promise than the bounce of a dead cat.
But if orthodox Trotskyism was felt to have performed shabbily, the other
part of the double act, in the shape of the ANL and Searchlight, arguably
fared even worse. Quite the most remarkable statistic of the campaign
(apart from the fact that the governing party could only find candidates
to fight 67% of the seats) came from Searchlight who predicted a "good
anti-fascism campaign" could possibly affect the BNP vote by between,
wait for it, "3% and 5%". And that was going into the election.
Quite in what regard Dont vote Nazi type propaganda
is held in the aftermath is moot, but if only 5% is all a well run campaign
can hope for, it does rather beg the question as to what amount of damage
has been inflicted by the type of bad anti-fascist campaign
for which the ANL is renowned?
Ten years ago militants looked on in disgust, as the ANL all but wiped
out the benefits of a two year AFA offensive in the then BNP heartland
of Bethnal Green in a matter of a few months. How much the BNP are beholding
to them in Burnley, where the ANL has been active for the last eighteen
months (rumour has it they are again threatening a national march there,
though surely wiser heads will prevail) can only be guessed at. Without
doubt in terms of realpolitik, orthodox Trotskyism cannot be the only
ones facing the possibility of liquidation.
But if form is anything to go by, the liberal left and their allies in
the media, (the most fair-weather surely being the Daily Express, who
only broke off a campaign attacking refugees just a few days before the
election to turn their fire on the BNP, and then returned after the weekend
to attacking refugees) will return to what really interests them by the
end of the week. But if for a moment they think the worst is over they
could not be more wrong: it is quite the opposite in fact. Much worse
is to come. Remember it was in the Euro elections in 1999 that the BNP
first signalled its intent when it took 100,000 votes, in a 20% turnout.
Consider for a moment then how much more credible local BNP candidates
everywhere will appear in the eyes of working class people when the results
of the European elections due to be held on June 10 2004 are announced?
Remember too that in 1999 it was the European campaign that laid the basis
for the spectacular in Oldham when Griffin took over 16% in a parliamentary
constituency, followed a year later by the election of three councillors
in Burnley in 2002.
Less than two weeks before Christmas Day 1999, London AFA called a special
meeting of the AFA Northern Network to try and alert activists to the
explicit threat faced by anti-fascism in the North West. Speakers pointed
out that in the last three years, as a result of AFA not working effectively
in the North West, the BNP had doubled the number of branches in
the region. In drawing on a study of the voting pattern in European
elections, the 3.5% registered support for the BNP across the North West
strongly indicated it was likely to be in the former cotton towns
like Oldham, Burnley and Pendle rather than inner London where the BNP
now expect to make their electoral breakthrough. Once they have one seat,
acquiring a second, will prove, as has been the case throughout much of
Europe that much easier.
Though heads nodded, outside of Manchester there were few real takers.
At the more extreme end, delegates from Bolton AFA argued vehemently that
the BNP had not changed strategy and all the talk of the need
for a progressive radical alternative was nothing more than
a "Red Action recruitment exercise.
Today outside of a few cranks, who still maintain the whole thing to be
a cunning wheeze cooked up by the RA publicity department, there is now
general acceptance that the political vacuum in working class areas needs
to be filled. And not just physically ward by ward or region by region.
Instead the prize is to be the party deemed most in tune with working
class consciousness. At the moment the BNP are front-runners. By June
next year the bookies may stop taking bets. For as well being in position
to add considerable volume to the overall numbers voting BNP nationally
in the Euro elections, by establishing a high profile in the GLA elections,
they have at the same time an opportunity to add considerable prestige
to their bandwagon by cracking the capital. A tripling or even quadrupling
of the 80,000 who voted the BNP candidate for Mayor in 2000 is not beyond
them. If this were to happen they would emerge from these elections as
a genuine national party and the negative impact on working class hearts
and minds across the country could well prove irreversible. So to say
the situation is grave is an understatement. But what are the options?
First off, to pretend that either the SA or the ANL or Searchlight can
play any positive role has to be kicked into touch. It is of course axiomatic
that a political alternative to the BNP must be constructed, and what
more than anything it needs to do is cater to the needs, concerns, and
aspirations of the constituency from which the BNP draws support, the
white working class. And as we witnessed over the last two years this
is a constituency where liberal anti-racism and its supporters are spectacularly
ill equipped to deliver.
Secondly it is also necessary that those who agree with the conclusions
drawn also take on board that if the BNP is to be directly confronted
in a high profile way, say in London in June, the purpose in the short
term is not to poll better from the outset; the BNP have too much of a
head start for that, so in the short to medium term beating the
fascists will need be replaced with a more modest target. That being,
to take a sufficient share of the seriously disenchanted white working
class Londoner vote to allow the progressive alternative to compete with
the fascists in the next heat. It is as straightforward as all that.
That such a candid admission will most likely be greeted by hoots of
derision by cretins who fairly routinely palm off votes as low as 16 or
19 in council by-elections, as something to be built on is
par for the course. More generally the degree of hostility, suspicion
and resentment toward anyone who tries to bring the working class back
into the political arena is proven by the reactionary body language that
greeted the IWCA results last May, and twice since.
Of all the condemnation perhaps the most bizarre explanation/criticism
for the relative success of the IWCA in working class communities, was
that the IWCA was not sufficiently socialist - like say the
SA! Which rather sidestepped the fact that it is obviously a case of either
or.
In its depiction of the IWCA strategy as sub-reformist localism
Weekly Worker sought to portray the IWCA appeal as being somehow apolitical,
plus the failure of the IWCA to even pretend to act like a national political
party (they dont even have a national website) was another
reason why true Marxists had nothing to learn from the IWCA
To the charges of not pretending the IWCA must plead guilty.
Up till now, the tactic has been to run a series of pilot schemes in working
class areas in order to prove to the sceptics that an independent working
class strategy was both vitally necessary, and more to the point, could
work.
It is now evident that to try and keep pace with the competition the
work must be expanded, and the pace of development accelerated: force-marched
actually. Before the summer it is expected the IWCA will launch as a national
organisation. In twelve months time candidates will be put forward to
contest the GLA elections.
Understandably there are reservations about so sudden a break with previous
custom and practice. But then the IWCA is itself a total break with what
has up to now been passed off as the epitome of radicalism. So the howls
of outrage from certain quarters that will follow the publication of the
manifesto will offer some reassurance that the gamble in stepping up to
the plate is on the right one.
Now obviously there is no way the IWCA can carry the fight with the resources
currently available so it is counting on there being a sufficient acceptance
by the rational element, within what is loosely termed the left, that
if the white working class are to be brought back on board (which is key
to everything that has gone before) it will on certain matters need on
occasion to be met at least halfway between reality, and possibly their
perceptions of that reality. Politics is, as is often said, the art of
the possible, so in order for the strategy to work ordinary people will
need to reasoned with rather than browbeaten or manipulated, which is
how they have been dealt with in the past.
It goes without saying that for the foreseeable future, the IWCA sees
the fight as being a defensive one. That simply is the lay of the land.
But being able to fight a defensive struggle in such terrain is not at
all bad, particularly when you consider the alternatives. Which frames
the remaining questions rather satisfactorily: if not the IWCA who, if
not this way how, if not now when? You decide.
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